Post
Topic
Board Economics
Re: Martin Armstrong Discussion
by
AnonymousCoder
on 30/03/2020, 07:18:41 UTC

The Martin Armstrong Scam

Where and how to complain

We have established beyond doubt that TheMartin Armstrong is running a scam.

Here is where to report it: Report international scams online! (click)

For example,

Select "Online Shopping/Ecommerce Services/Computer Equipment"
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Select "Online Shopping"
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Select "Other"
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And enter more details:

Company Name: AE Global Solutions, Inc.
Company Address: 5999 Central Avenue Suite 302
City: St Petersburg
State: Florida
Company Email Address: Looks this entity doesn't have one.
Company Website: armstrongeconomics.com
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Consumer Information: Enter your details
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Additional Information such as:

Quote
Martin Armstrong https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_A._Armstrong claims he is a forecaster, and he sells forecasts. He claims that he has a Global Artificial Intelligence Computer that he uses to make his forecasts. He reports numerous success stories with falsified forecasting performance. He projects different types of crises and sells expensive reports and conferences. He claims that consumers of his products survive the projected crises financially. He also sells a computer based trading system for trading purposes with fraudulent performance claims. It contains buy and sell advice although he claims in his fine print that it is for educational purposes only. He offers buy and sell advice in his subscription based blog. He claims that he has been the largest institutional and government advisor for decades. However most if not all of his performance claims are falsified. For example, no government has ever asked  him for advice - instead the US government locked him up in prison for 11 years, and his recent petition was denied: https://certpool.com/dockets/19-392.
The details of his scam are exposed at https://armstrongecmscam.blogspot.com/ which is a blog site. However it is organized and structured to some extent so it is easy to read. Further information can be found at https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1082909.new#new which is more difficult to read but contains more information. Martin Armstrong is a master of publishing his content and getting interviews from various affiliated alt-finance sites such as zerohedge.com, financialsense.com, bnnbloomberg.ca, dailymotion.com, fxstreet.com, marketsanity.com, omny.fm, peakprosperity.com, financialsurvivalnetwork.com, usawatchdog.com  and others. Most recently, an affiliate even created a Coronavirus scam by creating a petition where Martin Armstrong is advertised as a government advisor to solve the crisis. See "Bring in the expert Martin Armstrong to stop the destruction of the world economy" https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/bring-expert-martin-armstrong-stop-destruction-world-economy. He also sells an electronic book trying to profit from the crisis: "Coronavirus and Next Great Depression". I am suggesting that you read all pages of https://armstrongecmscam.blogspot.com/ That info I guess would be sufficient to create a court case against him. There is one overarching theme which is that he is barred from providing financial advice, and that his fine print on the product he sells states that it is for educational purposes only. However, he is continuously making public statements to the contrary selling his services as trading advice. There is proof of that on the quoted site. The other theme is that via the misrepresentation of the performance of his forecasting engine, he is misrepresenting the performance of his services in general because he claims that his services are driven by that engine. The misrepresentation has many manifestations, including the falsification of forecasting track records as documented on my site.


I hope this helps to get something started instead of arguing with the shills here forever.


Martin Armstrong is a charlatan, and he spent 11 years in jail for that reason but he has not changed.

Read this blog starting at page 273 to find out more about computerized fraud.


See armstrongecmscam.blogspot.com for a more compact view of major findings posted in this blog.